Patrick Moore stated: "Shimmy can be caused by any number of things"
That's true and correct. Shimmy is resonance. Resonance in a mechanical structure means everything important is just right.
Patrick Moore is also spot on in the way to fix it: Change something and see if it fixed it. If the resonance goes away, good, now you know. If the resonance doesn't go away, change something else. It's natural to want to change something that you can change for free, like tire pressure. Try those things first. Another thing you can change for free is the way you sit up and ride no handed. See if your own weight distribution changes the shimmy. It might, and if it does, maybe you will decide to simply fix the shimmy with your own riding technique.
Nobody on earth will take any number of details from your machine and say "The reason your bike shimmies is because of X". Nobody understands it completely, and nobody has sufficient understanding to look over a bike and say "this bike shimmies". It is entirely an empirical exercise. Theoretical generalizations can be applied after the fact, but none are universal.
Bill Lindsay
El Cerrito, CA
On Monday, August 31, 2020 at 12:43:47 PM UTC-7 Patrick Moore wrote: